..
Family
and Kinship among
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| The
histories and experiences of these three categories are different, so social
organisation among them, including family life, will necessarily be different. |
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| We
put them together here because they have many features of their social
environment in common, and it is those features which we should examine
for their effects on families. |
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| The
social environment is composed of two elements: (1) the regulatory and
legal environment and (2) the informal social environment. (Compare with
enabling
environment for empowering communities). |
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| The
regulatory environment is composed not only of the laws of the land, but
also the departmental and ministerial regulations of civil services at
local, provincial and federal levels. |
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| Some
of these are not overtly written down but include practices and behaviour
of governmental decision makers and officers even when they are seen as
discretionary. |
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| The
informal social environment includes the thoughts and actions of ordinary
people in the community with whom the subjects come into contact. |
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| These
include both prejudice and bigotry as well as more tolerant and accepting
attitudes and behaviour. |
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| Remember
that there is no monolithic or standard family, in form or function, for
any society, and therefore for the people in these three categories. |
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| Family
life is difficult for these three categories, and the main source of those
difficulties are the two environments mentioned above. |
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| Conflict
sociologists suggest the best way to understand there is through looking
at power relationships between families and the social environments within
which they are found. |
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| The
effects of these factors include poverty, poor health, inadequate housing
and marginal employment. |
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| All
of these are important in family form and function. All of them contribute
to weakening families among these three categories of people. |
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| Historically,
Canada’s immigration policy was outright racist. |
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| The
Chinese had to pay a head tax to immigrate. |
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| Encouragement
was given mainly to immigrants from the British Isles and northern Europe. |
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| After
World War II, immigration opened up for some others, including Eastern
Europe and other British Commonwealth countries. |
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| Since
then using the point system, the policy allowed immigrants to come more
from other countries. |
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| For
the first half of the previous century, inter racial marriage and intimate
relations were prohibited, and there were several cases when police raided
the homes of inter-racial couples to arrest them and take them to police
stations to book them. |
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| Before
he became Prime minister, Pierre E. Trudeau introduced legislation to counteract
this with his famous statement, "The state has no business in the bedrooms
of the citizens." |
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| Most
families from these three groups are sources of support and strength for
their members, but the external social forces working to break them down
counteract that. |
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| Because
of the environment, large numbers of immigrants who are also visible minorities
found it more welcoming to move to urban areas where others had already
settled. |
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| This
caused the creation and growth of ethnic enclaves in urban areas, which
in turn contributes to ethnic stereotypes and ethnic conflict and misunderstanding. |
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| Assimilation
and integration means the process of immigrant groups becoming more like
mainstream families, and interacting more with them. |
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| Stanford
Lyman, my first sociology teacher (see the Bartle text book) did research
in the 1960s, comparing Japanese and Chines immigrants to USA and Canada. |
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| He
found that the rates were comparable in Canada and the USA; Japanese assimilating
more quickly and Chinese assimilating more slowly. |
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| His
research also demonstrated that the official policies of Canada (the mosaic
policy) and the USA (the melting pot policy) had little effect on their
assimilation rates. |
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| Culture
of origin was a more influential variable. |
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| Migrants
who tend to move to ethnic enclaves tend to assimilate more slowly than
others. |
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| If
those persons who are fighting, in the name of strengthening and protecting
families, the present introduction of legislation to allow same
sex couples to become married, would spend as much energy, resources,
interest and support to families of immigrants, First Nations and visible
minorities, they would do far more to help families to survive and grow. |
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